Why You (Usually) Need ID to Buy Alcohol-Free Beer (2024)

Why do you need ID to buy alcohol-free beer and other “alcohol substitute” drinks? Find out why pubs, bars and retailers give many alcohol-free drinks the same restrictions as alcoholic ones.

These days, it’s no surpriseto need ID when you buy alcohol, even if you’re on the wrong side of 30 likeme.

What we don’t expect is to have to show ID to buy alcohol-free beer.

After all, if there’s no alcohol in it, anyone should be able to buy it right?

If you’re a regular buyer of alcohol-free beer, you’ll probably know this isn’t the case. In many pubs, bars and shops, alcohol-free drinks are treated the same as alcoholic drinks.

Why You (Usually) Need ID to Buy Alcohol-Free Beer (1)

This means no service to anyone who can’t prove they’re above the legal drinking age and often no service outside of licensing or alcohol sale hours.

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In this article, we’ll lookat why retailers treat many alcohol-free and non-alcoholic drinks the same asalcoholic drinks. We’ll focus on UK retailers, but what we cover is also applicablein other regions including Europe and North America.

Why you usually need ID to buy alcohol-free beer

The first thing to highlight is that alcohol-free beer does contain some alcohol – anything from trace amounts to around 0.5% ABV (alcohol by volume).

This isn’t why retailersrestrict the sale of alcohol-free beer, because:

  • In most regions, including the UK and many US states, drinks under 0.5% ABV aren’t legally considered “alcohol” and aren’t subject to the same restrictions as alcoholic drinks
  • Everyday foods and drinks such as ripe bananas and bread contain similar amounts of alcohol and they’re not restricted

Why then do retailers treatalcohol-free beers the same as alcoholic drinks? Are they just being difficulton purpose?

Not really – they restrictthe sale of alcohol-free beer for two main reasons:

  1. To avoid promoting alcohol to children
  2. To make it easier to enforce rules regarding alcoholic drinks

Let’s delve a little deeper into each of these reasons.

Avoiding promoting alcoholto children

Whether you drink alcohol ornot, you’ll likely agree that we shouldn’t promote alcohol to minors.

What’s this got to do with drinks that don’t contain alcohol?

Alcohol-free beer may not contain much – if any – alcohol. But the packaging and the drink itself is almost indistinguishable from alcoholic beer.And although there are many producers that only produce alcohol-free beer, lots of alcohol-free and non-alcoholic beers are produced by companies that also produce alcoholic drinks.

This means that promoting “alcohol substitute” drinks such as alcohol-free beer to minors – including allowing them to buy it – could indirectly promote similar products to them that do contain alcohol.

Two alcohol organisations that have publicly available policies about the promotion and sale of non-alcoholic drinks to minors are the corporate arm of brands like Budweiser and Beck’s, AB-Inbev, and the Portman Group, a UK trade group of alcoholic drinks producers.

AB-Inbev’s Responsible Marketing and Communications Code, which identifies how the company will prevent its products appealing to those under the legal drinking age, specifically mentions that covers includes alcohol-free and non-alcoholic products.

The Responsible Marketing and Communications Code (RMCC) applies to all forms of brand marketing and commercial communication for all AB InBev products that contain alcohol, use an alcohol trading name, or are an alcohol-free or non-alcohol beer product.

AB-Inbev’s Responsible Marketing and Communications Code

The Portman Group’s voluntary Code of Practice on the Responsible Naming, Packaging and Promotion of Alcoholic Drinks also covers non-alcoholic products.

It says, “…if a drink below 0.5% ABV shares the same brand or branding, or is a variant of a drink that is subject to the Code, then it is the view of the Advisory Service that the spirit of the Code will apply in the same way to that product.”

Why You (Usually) Need ID to Buy Alcohol-Free Beer (2)

Tesco, Lidl, Aldi and Asda didn’t respond to my requests for information on their policies on the promotion and sale of alcohol-free beer. But it’s clear that they and other retailers are taking a similar approach to AB-Inbev and the Portman Group regarding the promotion and sale of alcohol-free beer in their stores.

Hey Jon, these products are normally dealcoholized, meaning they are products aimed at adults rather than children. It would be wrong to sell such products to under 18s as they are meant as a substitute for alcohol. 1/2

— Tesco (@Tesco) June 14, 2019

Hi Laura, we do this because as a responsible retailer, we don't want to promote alcohol like products to under age customers. Apologies for the inconvenience caused. Jess

— Waitrose & Partners (@waitrose) April 29, 2019

Co-op’s approach focuses on its reputation with customers as well as the availability of alcohol substitute products to children.

A spokesperson for Co-opsaid: “As a responsible retailer we voluntarily restrict the sale ofnon-alcoholic drink products which resemble a beer, wine or spirit, as we donot want to give the impression to customers that people under 18 are beingpermitted to purchase products that contain alcohol.”

As a responsible retailer we voluntarily restrict the sale of non-alcoholic drink products which resemble a beer, wine or spirit…

Co-op

Enforcing rules regarding alcoholic drinks

Another reason why pubs, bars and retailers often treat alcohol-free beer the same as products that contain alcohol is to make it easier to enforce rules regarding alcoholic drinks.

We’ve already highlightedthat the packaging of alcohol-free beer is almost identical to that of beerthat contains alcohol.

This isn’t much of an issue in shops, where point-of-sale systems can flag up the differences between alcohol-free and alcoholic beer for staff to prevent them selling alcoholic products to minors by mistake. (The knock-on effect of this is it also affects the availability of alcohol-free drinks where the sale of alcohol is restricted to specific days or hours of the day.)

@sainsburys I was refused a sale of non-alcoholic beer past 10pm in one of your Edinburgh shops recently. Why was I refused a legal sale? The Licensing (Scotland) Act 2005 specifically excludes "alcohol which is of a strength of 0.5% or less at the time of its sale".

— Scott (@thereddesert75) June 20, 2019

But it can be an issue inpubs and bars where owners are responsible for what people drink on thepremises, as well as what they buy. Here, it makes sense for them to treatalcohol-free beer the same as alcoholic drinks to monitor what customers aredrinking.

For example, the UK’s Wetherspoon pub company doesn’t sell alcohol-free beer to minors. It says, “it can be difficult for staff to distinguish between customers who are drinking alcohol and those drinking non-alcohol products.”

…it can be difficult for staff to distinguish between customers who are drinking alcohol and those drinking non-alcohol products.

Wetherspoon

Hi Francois. Because non-alcoholic beer, wine and spirits are still sold in our alcohol section we apply the same rules as alcohol products. This is mostly to avoid any mix ups that could end up with alcohol being sold to someone under age. Hope this helps – Cameron

— Tesco (@Tesco) July 10, 2019

Over to you

Selling alcohol-free beer under 0.5% to minors isn’t illegal in most regions. And getting asked for ID when buying alcohol-free beer can be annoying, especially if you don’t have any on you.

However, it seems that retailers are focused on society’s best interests by voluntarily restricting the sale of alcohol-free beer. Their ultimate aim is to protect children from the dangers of alcohol.

In the future, we might evensee legislation regarding the sale of “alcohol substitute” productsand children. After all, retailers voluntarily restricted the sale of e-cigarettesto children before it became law. The same could happen with alcohol-free andnon-alcoholic beer as they become more and more popular.

But is alcohol-free beer really a danger to minors? Or do “alcohol substitute” drinks without alcohol actually promote healthy habits?

I’d love to know your thoughts. Message me on Twitter or Facebook, or leave a comment below.

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Non-alcoholic beer wholesalers in the UKWhy we shouldn't moan about price of alcohol-free beerIs 0.5% ABV alcohol-free?
Why You (Usually) Need ID to Buy Alcohol-Free Beer (2024)
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